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The Huron Signal, 1889-11-22, Page 6t.. • THE POET'S CORNER. • 1'M MM of aimilrwry. Mow tk/ap eo go by contraries, la fhb sublunary sphere t Ano meal ammo, of Fate'svIprles, Are the queerest et the newer. Mr Goodman is • bad saes, Mr Wetheas • always III; Mr Joy heM•sad mar. Mr W issmaai wisdom's alL Mr Blaokm.a is • white mink Mr Whits he is • Mask; Mr Stout he is • spilt mus, Lr Neat le teapots dist. Mr W iotets full d abler, Mr tiammmh always meld: Mr pubis weer a carder -Chip" was ever kasws to hold. Mr Loss he Is a start moa, Mr Wildman he le meek; Mr Lesraode an untaught own, Mr Meek has got the "cheek.' Mr Tailor seer made breeches. Nor did Nailer drive a nail; Mr Pitcher never pitches. Nor does Bailor reef a sail. Mr Walt is always .arty. Mr Early's always late; Mr Sweet is slwayse urly, Mr Crook is always "straight." Aud. so, thro' the categories! 0 ! what is there that cam 11e Like nieu'a names- except the stories Told by Wmb.tones when men diet Houton Globe. Jeer to Jasper. I ono recommend Burdock Bl,xi.i Bit- ten as s sure cure for scrofula. i heed it for four years, and was au bad at one tune that I sax almost • solid wore. 1 commenced taking B. B. B. last summer, have taken three bottles, and am entire- ly cured. Mi.. ELLalt Pirr, Jasper, Out. 2 .1111. WHAT TO READ. IT AMY EWIS6, "When a person has learned how to recd, and to -t what to read, he is in great petit This statement seems startling, but it is nevertheless true. Have you ere: realized how much depends on your choice of books 1 We have talked of "why we read" .cd "hcw to reed," Feet we have yet to answer the question, "What to read ?" It will require some months to answer it in detain, but just now we will think of the emneral subject and try to get some ides of the import- ance of knowing bow to select the best booka Reading well need is one of toe beet things in lite ; abused, it is one of the weirt. It can Boake or mar our char- acters. There are many people who thick that reading is in itself a good thing, a meriturioue act ; they have never given the subject enough earnest attention to comprehend that it may be s bad act— that it may even prove • curse if books are not carefully chosen. Did you ever think of the vast amount of reading matter that is published? Boake aro issued from the prem at the rate of seventy volumes every day. The country is flooded with newspapers and periodicals of all sort?. flow are we to chows from this great m..e of roadie_ matter that Ties before os? 1'u read every book that Domes acrtssour posh Wu, be like the ostrich, which eats whatever comes in its way. You would not accept as a friend every person whom you chance to meet on the street, and our books are to be chosen as carefully as our friends. There is a vast amount of indifference al out this matter. Did you ever watch the people in a public library and notice bow few have a definite idea of what they want : They wander around in as aimless way, ilaucing into the books that are accessible, occasionally asking the busy attendants to mention the name of a ,arta book. As we watch them we THE HURON SIGNAL. FRIDAY, NOV. 22, 1869. prove it. Whet Mitosis 1 '1 W N suet seclude es lar ae pssible the sell that sot rounds sa Osr reading has a tioeltive sad d.twet brasses, us our linoleum, and we an, by • sees slums of books, surround our souls with • sort of Oliee.s wall whish ether ini.esees eon with difieslty tweak through. Avoid all hooks that berm toe or masks you dissoste.ted with your let or make yes think lightly of ono "Tie teed of the p ddt.g is is the eating." and so 'eeny books must be proved by totieg. 11 the first taste shoes that the b..u.k is oswholsosse, reject' it se you would Ser- fage W take something poisonous lute your system. A reader and tbisker Ila said, "I should coma nearer to my fel- lows, .ad my God poorer to me, or the thief is s poison." If you are useert.ta whether a book has • good or an evil tendency, melee in what state of mind you lay it deem. .IAD WILILY 10'animator 0000. It ill sot enough that • book is harm- less, although many good people see.. to think so whoa esleoti.g librettos for Sunday schools. It isa waste of time. if nothioe wore., to read the weak, characterless volumes that are so often plied in the hands et young people ay those who should Meer hotter Whet you wait is something that sill w1ueoor you fur good. ••Books are the brick and stone, the mortar and timber, sof w hate.er buiMinr s e propose erecting This character -building is a serious hest - sees; it is the business of life. tam, wear YOU torsi I•LLI Yg30 You can rain an idea of your natural taste out only by the degree of iuterrat you feel in your reading, but .la.. by the strength of the impressive' ivade epui you. E. not be di .ppoiated if you are not interested in what you know to ! r the best hormone; your taste will change and improve with cultivation Like the chameleon, you will take your col. r from what you feed upon ; feed upon what will make you pure, what will give you strength. Thomas Carlyle said, "Among all the objects that look wonderful or beautiful tai you, follow w ith fresh hope the one that looks woe - clef Nimbi, beautifulest," Jest imagine your wife not being able to speak for ten Mays. WI • change them would be in the house! ..-,at am uuna.ural silence! A case et thio Lind occurred in Hamilton some time ago, and one bottle of Wilson's Wild Cherry cured the afflicted lady In four days. This medicine bas wit -gnat fur the Cure of i'ougb.. Colds Whooping lough or Croup. void by all druggists. Imu mrtIJ•i Capital. An Associated Press despatch says : —"The Argeutto' Rdput.lIc proposes to open 750,000 acres 11 land to immigrants at a very small price, the holdings to range from 500 to 1,000 acres each. lb. emigration frcm Southeru Europe to the Republic is already large, and it will doubtless be increased by the concede Mont, which are supplemented by free passage to Buenos Ayres from European porta" The Antietam* Republic s being developed at • very remarkable rate by British capital. Seine are in- clined to think that the country has bor- rowed too much kr railroad c:nstruction and other improvements. However that may be, the progress made has been phenomenal. Britain takes the larger portion of the exports, which omelet of meet, cattle, wool, hides, and wheat, paving for them with re►Ir'ad drub and general manufactures. The trade is highly profitable to both parties and is cmatantly growing. Over • thousand million dollars of Brash money have been sunk in the cumatey during the past twelve years. Under this tippets. popu- lativa is coming in from all part. of Europe,bot pnncipp•�Ily from Italy. Why is it that Huish capital i. begin - 01 M thee Osseus the go-by 1 We borrow v aeiiaa-TToe' Federal purposes, and get • lot of money to be advanced on term mortgages; but there is no such wholesale investment in active industries wonder why they ars to read at all,wh-o as in the United Staten and the Ariren- they are els ignorant concerning the tine Republic, although these are (co- ncede of their minds a:.d soul. etgn onuntries. The train reason, with- I:e. E E Hee fella a story cf en old I out:dou",t. is that the British investor lady whet wont to visit some friends in the country. A severe storm kept the family in the house for a while. and old Mr. Doubleday was asked If she would does not as a rule find Canada • profit able field. %%e have an abundance of 'lateral wealth, but we have no market for it. We are divorced commercially liLo to here a book to read in order that (non the c,btinent to which we belong. times u.ilht nod hams hearyotitber hands A Targe amount of English money has lobe assented briskly, and then was askedbee n aunt in Manitoba and the Terri- R!,.t bete she preferred. • tortes. From time to time the English "I ah•,uld like the same book i had investors send out agents to report on last year. It was a very nice book, and I was interested in it." "Certainly," replied Mw Ellen ; "what was it ' "I de not remember its name. Your mother brought it to we ; I think she w ,old remember." But Mn Liston had forgotten. ' Was it a hovel or a bock of sarong hitt ory "I can't remember shout that. but it war an interesting hook You will find it. Ellen, I know. The odor of the color wee the color of the top ot the beloster. Ellen had • good eye for color, and as she ran et. stain she took the shade of the bsluater in her eye, matched it per- fectly, and brought the book in triumph to Jin :Doubleday. It:proved:to be the right bo.,k, and Mrs Doubleday found in it the pies of worsted she bad left for a 'nark a year before ; so she was able to g" on from where she stop- ') rhe kind o.f intelligence which re- members a hook only by the color of the 1.. o' ling is not confirmed to old Mrs teeblyday. All around us we see p.•• ple who hare little 'des .f what • bok as its value or its w,rthlesimesa What an a good boob do? Refine the hetes: lead to pore, high thought. and noble ideas; corset false impressions of truth; help to qualify youtfor your place in the world. It will leer! you Into new held* of thought and action, but a bad book will demoreliss yetur nature and ruin ycur rel. r.Rit' wRAT 14 rhos. "Coarse feeding 'risky' coarse flesh." Did you ever notice how an impure re- mark or • vulgar *tory will remain is your memory no matter how much you may wish to forget ft 1 At the mess time. perhaps, you heard ansething w orth remembering that aeon pained out of your recollection. This te.d•ney to Sema the h•rmfn) and melees, while re- jfgrfms the helpful and welsh, le so pre- ilgMmt that it metres tie to rseg.g be the non-appearance of dividend& These men «y with one accord that the soil is rich, hut that the progress el settlement and the growth of population are exceed- ingly slow compared with the rate of ad- vancement in the Northwestern States. And when they look a little further into the matter they find that restricted trade is at the bottom of it all. The settler'a labor on our side of the line is not as profitable to him as the labor of the eet- tler on the other side, for the simple reason that our settler has to pay more for what he bays and ohtains less for what he sells in «move ent.. of the ens - toms barriers by which he is hemmed about, This is true also of the farmers, fishermen, lumbermen and miners, who constitute the great body of producers in the older prorunees. The British ape italid knows no flag when he is invest - dig. He please his money where the people are 'twat IWO.peroes sod the eon- d'tioes soot favorable, beaus there he iv most likely to obtain a good niters. Knowing our unfortunate ansmetaneee -that we are pretreated from trading freely with Britain as well so with the Untied States ---be eeneludes that ba can make more oat of his mosey somewhere else, sad so year by year we are getting less of it relatively to the amount going t0 other oowntriee. Tb. eerie for this, se foe *o many of the other drawbacks to C.nadias prosperity, is not higber duties with a more oomplete isolation, but so- restristsd trade with the sixty milli*. euetomsrs at our doer. It would thee be worth while for eatable capital to mese is *.d help as to develop est reentry. No burse ear be lady happy m which the sunroofs of the (.ro.0 ramie are I seaweed w shoe their a5 for area ober. riot. cures • keened is the ref. a ad shintrese, boys pantaelarly, eines they rood a kw or say other Lomb., de euesei uaaus as too babyish fee them, and they shim it s• they ovoid pesos. Perhaps leis d the ustterruwtb of Ie. gime us the mother's paid The sore .d yo.ugor children crowds the older oats .aide aid before aLe knows it these deer little ewe have Lemmas accost. mod to du wu►eodt the e.d..rassne• that ware showered on them w tul•utile years, sod mei leerily be eon back. Bishop Vto- osut says the average Ouy at the age of thirteen or tbere•huut, has not • friend esuspt hi. 'anther. lie is a terror to .voiy one, bet fur ell that his peen( boort peubabty ofteu yearns fur • Bilie petier:et sud tovtttet. Ten, ultra we take hums -love as • mat- ter u( averse, Just se we take the air, the aru.htue sad other blessings of life ; we fail to realm that it is hk. • pion' and that W give the best futures mast be fostered and eat - noised oaretitlly. It se a0 uacomaauu tams to mud • houseful of half grow.. aitldren ■bo is scarcely remember . ten they have beau kissed by tether ur meaner, muses, perb•W, O0 • ratan. tr. m • long journey But a good-ngthi embrace, • little hue. s .Jmp•thwos pat on the shoulder when they ars in trouble, u am remote an imperilment dal tug back sa many years, that they have utterly furrotten It. Husev.r, let v.e of thew boll cut his band or fall out of the hammerer and get a Moody head, how quiekiy the saute Lenity are alarmed, mud run to .u. a.sist•oes with k,vu.g e ervia ! Thr•.'igu bis wunods he sera they telly hay• hearts, that they oo faire for him after all, and secretly he rather ropey being bruised since it has revealed to him that his family have a.. interest in bin bey.ud merely seeing that he has eouuith to eat and a place to sleep Hew sad tt is that he must near- ly early tweak hie beck to bed it out ' As far the attitude of the children •swig themselves, any loving drmou str•tio0 toward each • ther 'mould be al- most as overwheltuu.g as if •cyclone had struck them. They art ashamed of the pet names of babyhood, awl are distressed beyond measure if their mother addresses them as "dear" in the presence of a stranger. 'Pe grow up mooring or cultivating • con - /mweressa to WeelliMismos. Artisans, meshasiea, .ad 1•boriagmsm ens liable 1e asides aeeidesie sad Opo- rto. as well M pistol orda, inhibit sod i.mwses. T. ail thee troubled we would reessels*.nd Howard's Yellow Oil, the heady .ad reliebis pie ens for outward or) items' see. 4 Wiwi'$ Weems M desnglgam. load -Standing Blood Diwaaea the persevering Sarsaparilla - Tills medicine is as Alterative• and suis • radiol o ist's* la the system. The pee•eaa, is sums alma. may sat he quite so rapid as in others ; but, with persistence, tis vassal to ~tads. Read these testimonials : — " For 150 yearn I sneered hos a se- vere pain In my right stir, and had other troubles cause.l by r dvrrsl and dyspeprta After giving medicines $ fair trial without a.e re, 1 began to take Ayers Sarsaparilla_ was greatly benefited by the drat bottle, *ad after taking ere bottles i was e•unt- pletely cured." — John W. lteoauu. 70 Lawrence ret., Lowell. Maas. Lost May a large carbuncle broke out os my arni. The usu•1 reute.liea had no effect end I was confined to my bed foe eight weeks. A friend induced roe to try Ayer'. Sarsaparilla. Lea. '.au three bottles healed the note. In all toy expe- rience with me.l.cise, I rover sew more ars cured by use of Ayer's Wonderful Results. Another marked effect of the use of this made -tee was the strengthening of my sight." — Mrs. Carrie Adams, Holly Springs, Texas. I had a dry acedy humor forear*. and suffered terribly ; and. as nay broth- er and sister were similarly .ousted. I presume the malady is hereditary- last winter, lir. Tyros, (of Fernandina, Fla.,) recommended me to take Ayer's San,apt:rilla, and continue it Inc a year. For dee months I took it daily. I have not had • blemish upon my bode for the last three months."—T. N. Wiley. lin Chambers at., New York City. "Lest fall and winter 1 was troubled with a dull, heavy pain In my MM.. 1 dial not Douce it mu.b at first, but it gradually grew worse until it became almost unbearable. I1onog the (atter part ,d this time, disorders of the stota- a.-li and liver increased my t holes I began takingAyer's Sarsaparilla. and. after faithfuly continuing the use of the medicine for some months, the pain lisappearei and 1 watt compietety ire.l " — Mr*. Augusta A. Purbueh, 11a.rrhill, Mass. Ayer's Sarsaparilla, ratcpAaxu DT Dr. J. C. Ayer is Co., Lowell, Masa rote et o ohs twates, $1. Warta 0•, • bout& alone culpable. The injured leg is tot to be Warned The three partner. who "weed the three legs with which the est tempt for these little tenderoesers makes ran to the cotton .111 pay oee fourth the boys buuruh,•uddoes not add one whit to value etf the hales to the punnet who their meekness ordt:futty. The assumes was the proprietor of the injured leg." of girls aro somehow, less influenced by the absence of these demonstrations —at least, at Is .ems painfully osticsable, but all the refinements of Docility cannot balance the gentle schooling ,f home, aid although sister may not be as clown ooh and rude as is her brother under the same surroundings, yet her character sown takes on petty deceits and habitual dsae istulstions. This repression of the emotional aide of our natures in our family life tea grave mistake, and to is may be attributed one half the limit burning and little gnaw- ing griefs that beset us daily. Many a good souther lives her life through, and goes to her grave mi.undert,..d by thoseabe would have died to serve, because she Dever gave elpreesion to her real fee ling*. She has kept back her sweetest self until her children have come regard ler as unemotional and cold. Like beget* like. This is a law from which there is no deviation. The children in turn soon Tern to check any show of tenderness, Meeplem Worry Is often ieccasi'.ned by • hamming, tiek- ling cough which might easily be cured if the right remedy—Hagyatd's Pectoral Balsam—was made use of. Its aoo,bing, healing and expectorant qualities make it wended ally useful in every family for coughs and colds Our esteemed contemporary, the Mil- waukee 4r4ui.l, appears as an advocate of the words "pants' and says that the world can't get along without them. That is tree. Let there be "panto" by all mean•. Sao long as there is a gent" on the top of the earth let him be cloth- ed. ARMSTRONG until, se the ,sera go by, they here act FAANIIG WILL AND PUMP WORKS' SO well when they h lemon of indifference, ARESTRORG'S IMPROVED that when they have arrived d manhood and womanhood and come to separate '` each to take of. his own life work, they ; Grain and Seed C:eaner TO= .= S0w11Ms --: STANDARD :— �...a..--- ENGLISH AND CANADIAN. Aube A LIme■ SHOOK /NOW TWO a.•T AMERICAN MAKERS. A ruse surety or TWAT FAV 0 I WHITE OABTIL, IC TU B3ND. rstterC r. w •• F. JORDAN'S MEDICAL HALL. ANOTHER STEP TO THE FRONT. ISAAC N. CASSIDAY GROCER has removed from Crabb's Block, to McLean's new Blood, Court -house square, into the Plats glass grocery store, 3rd door west of British E change Hotel, 2 doors east of T. Det- lor's Dry Goods Store, Where Both Old and New Customers will be Welcome 1 also intend to give Great Bargains in Teas and Sugars. I have just got in a tine assortment of fancy Delf and of the very latest patterns in Brown Rustic Tea Sets, Slate Rustic Tea Sets, Enamelled Floral Tea Sets, Brown Rustic Dinner Sets, Slate Rustic Dinner Seto, Sege Rua - tic Dinner Sett, Blue Benak'h Toilet Sets, Brown Summer Toilet Seta, Begonia Toilet Sets, Enamelled Toilet Sets, also a very fine assortment cf plain Delf that will be sold cheap, and 1 intend to pay the highest i.rice for Farmers' Produce. • Thanking my Customers for pileup patronage, solo soliciting their further orders. Orders will be delivered with pleasure to any - part of the Town. I_ N, CA.SSIDAY, Ooderich. Oct. bk. ut+lk PLATE GLASS GROCERY. Have joet posed through the Custom House. Direst bots the i6melitetuetts. the B.ut Assorted Stork of D ESS G EVER BROUGHT INTO GODERICH, CONSISTING OP SILK WARP HEITRIETTAS NEWEST SHA) Ks, All Wool Henrietta Cloths, Cashmeres and other dress Goods AT PRICES AT LEAST 20 PER CENT LESSOR THAN ZITHER TORONTO LONDON Full THE SAME CLASS OF GOODS. :o: Ready made IMen's Suits of :Bost Material, Fashionably Made at Fabsk+nsly Low Pricer. do without a pang, and henceforth e are no more for sash other than furl is generachine madey for thoroughly 1c he t he besand ma - I cbtnsana+de Ivr thoroughly cleaning grain and peed* of all kind.. —IT— Separates all Noxious Seeds strangers. Many years ago I was visiting in • I family, and after tea was engaged to i conversatu n with the host and bootees . in the parlor, when the door opened and in trouped the children to say good night to papa and mamma As they ran in tura to the parents, clambered on their taps or clasped them around the neck to receive s loving kit, I thought I had n ever seen • lovelier eight. 1 have never i forgotten it, and to this day whenever menthes is made of home happiness, my mind instantly t Certs to that pleasant 1 scene. "I1 wnold have looked better haei tha and sheer from grain at -one ebonies, saving and cleaning all timothy seed at the same time out of any kind of grain. It eau be fitted into any fanning mill without removing the shoe, no mailer how old he mill is, and makes it do as gaud work or better than tl,e most improved new mills known. It allows no stied to be blown into the cbaff It Cleans Speedily. Mr Every cleaner warranted to work as repre- sentedn0 sa"► or a in ordering tit mail give ine:de width of .hr,' and name of maker of mill if convenient, an.i if shoe has aide share or the old f.sbiun- ed hind shake. — mother and father gene the to children's A large guaranty 01 room and hidden them g.e,d night, rath- er than have them sake a show before stringers," did you say ? My dear Mn Punctilio. don't you know that in the beautiful innocence of childhood there are nit shams—that everything is genuine i Their little hearts are too full of love and warmth to think of stage -effects. L. cddbiooded older people continue ti enjoy a mon- opoly of represeion and cultivated in- difference, but for the sake of all that keeps us sweet, don't let oa en- courage it in the children. When, from any sora, the digestive and secretory orirare become disordered, they may be stimulated to healthy ac- tion by the impart Ayer's Cathartic Pills. These Palls pirm preseribed by the beat physicians, and are fur sale at all the drug stores. : e5M.at Jesseee. Dr Henry M. Sounder relates a ase of Oriental justice that could hardly be outdone for sharp and subtle discrimina- tion. Four men, partners in business, bought some cotton bales. That the rats might not destroy the mitten, they membered • at. They agreed that meth of the four should own • particular leg of the est ; sad eaeh adorned with beads theta( apportioned to kis. The at. by an accident, injured one of its Imre 9 4.e owner of that member wooed aimed it • rail snaked in rail The eat, gang too sear the Are, est them eta fire. •sd be - tag is groat psis, robed is amass the sotto. kale wham she else asesotomed to bit vets. The entices thereby took Are and was bowed. The three other t►i�brought sals obiagalest fourth partner who owned the poth- oler keg rif the est. The jades examin- ed the ens sad leaded thea :—'The Ing that W the oil tun es it was belt ; the sad +mild .et use ties lex—ha Iso', it bid OM keg or sed ram with the Oho three {1••gs. The three sehert ). !henir tate sinisi the be be 1ha settee sod awe FIRST CLASS PUMPS en hand manufactured from Algoma white quartered pine. g;t,rder• by mail promptly attended to. Slipped to any remit. ADDRIC88 ARMSTRONG BROS., G-oderich, Ont. 1- ft LIME. NOTICE TO BUILDERS & FARMERS The Falls Reserve Lime Kiln is now running full time and any quantity of Fresh time, can be obtained at the Kiln at all times for lOc. a bushel. M. d C. BI CHLLLR,Proprietors OcdertMaya&, its. Tlitf !a1er Sor'ice & 1tsnirs The undersigned is prepared to undertake the putting in of tWater Services in connection with the Town System to Dwell- ings and other Buildings. Also REPAIRS To Steam Engines, Mills, Fac- tories and Machinery of all kind. Prices reasonable. Satisfac- tion Guaranteed. WILSON SALKE. a Pairs of Cloth Pants at $1.25. u: IN HARDWARE DEPT. GLASS, PAINTS, OILS, 'VARNISH AND BUILDING MATERIAL, A FULL STOCK. NAILS, $2.70 PER KEG. C. CRAABB, April 19, 1889. SQUAWK, JOHN ROBERTSON Hep to announce 16at he is now .gest for The Liquor -Tea Compaiirs Celebrated 'Paas Your choice of one out ot a hundPed or more Handsome Volume by the Beat Authors, given with every 3 Ibe. Give it a trial, and acquire a Valuable Library without feeling the expense. 1 FEW GALLONS OF PURE MAPLE SYRUP LEFT. j39' JOHN ROBERTSON, RHINAS' OLD STAND, COR. SQUARE AND MONTREAL STS Goderich Foundry and Machine Works, RUNOIMAN BROS., - Proprietors. WS MAVII ON HAND POR SALE:AIL pro��dLand Rollers - - - Price MOO. 11717111 - POWERS GRAIN CRU$RIR , STRAW 0UTTRR , PLOW POINTS Alia. .AT L4OW C31-11:73 :1 FLOUR RILLS WILT 01 THE LATEST ISS Sltarb?r amiss madea Bangem�ents with tit JOHN' =GIN= &OII.EB Wolin 00. 11101101110• We are !rowed to Prises to Pezdos want oi the .1 stt>ds ashen orsrzsarofa 0*' TME twee* f JseN.ps that wet let. IIh• NW ass. Pretty alteration dresses of owls mufti's heir eget mile ver eiw ins s of nivel or heavily rei these helms mute fevor.d insanities then moire et falsity of say sort. Braid is still very smolt used to • atTIS S and walking sotsheaq i essien beard aeons ti erred this euros. This is este a sew garniture, bet it u one of •%stirs, itsezpeuwive and appn Isishea let a plain stoning of Tartans, ohialy in bee wuull•o fab dilly appearing is saw foram bureaus. of color. These •r • autumwl dyes, o• groes' green, olive brume is semis* se, seabossay, bliss, end b ssturtiom Wore form the outline darker blocks, with their bi of glowing yellow, wall•Power pale terracotta. graceful gooiest, quite nal style, to be worn over an moor pleated house dress, t. made of ve `teed with either a oostraatiog or IlaonIaDg color. It has • Looses (I sad is sleeveless, and is Ilnuhed load Direotuire eo.t tails at the t It is called the "Dtr•ctuire slip," pot o0 over • dainty gown, • rich e Is given .t moderate expense, for slip cm be made of five yards of ve The sew sutumo wraps have De all wide sleeves in order w gu on fertably over the puffed she of the gown. Many of the thea are themselves made oiled sleeves gathered into a deep C wslhon cuff of fur or velvet. A deal of beaver and astrakhan is tea trimming cloaks and shore ousts for winter. Matey of the pew e«lssin s are fancifully trimmed with vac kinds of fur bands, capes, hoods deep cellars. The elegant effect, ever, is lowered, and the gamiest invariably a made -over to .k. Trim a seal coat is like painting • lily. less trimming such a garment has rebel It l.m.ks Have you a ONO t tate W,len's Cherry. Have you • OM 1 Take Wales's Cherry. Have you Hro•chltis ! Take Wilson's aH a you lost your voice t Take WI Wild Cherry. Have)un Asthma 1 Take Wilson'. Cherry. Have you a Cold in the Heed 1 Take s«'a Wild Cherrrryy. 1 he Pity R.H.N. rare for all dirt. the Threat. ('hest and Lungs. Sold dna/gists, HOUSEHOLD HINTS. The juice of peaches, like the cherries, dexo pot jelly readily, k inclined to make a syrup instead. one pint of apple Juice is added to two pints of peach Juice the jelly e Reich nicer, •hilt no perceptible et the Atom.. Not baring glee when i conned my cherries year. I heated the juice and sealed until 1 could have apple juice to esu it Pieplaatelly u better made tr same way. 1, have succeeded we mooing pieplant in cold water. It be canned while it is growing vigor' or it will be rather bitter. Painful burns, bruises, scalds rota are quickly soothed aod heal Victoria Carbolic Salve. A cool sellar does not mean $ cellar. The cellar should be will every day, and ale. given • good washing whenever it is necessary ' en. Every portion of the cellar • be thoroughly cleaned, and if it cement Lear it should even be acro bleed. Sick Headache caused by vie bile or a dia.rdere•d stomach is pre relieved by wing National Pills. Bee fine copper sirs by the trout banging pictures. it dos not ash wbt Ong wire , r onnl dere. looks far bettee Tab time t1, 11.4.1 manilla paperover the ar every picture frame not siready pi .din this way.ape: a. it eistually opr dost from re•chiog the pidorea c sammpisee wrest Gees. To Ten ENVIE . —now. imbue,. readers that I here a p.sitire r for the above named di.ease. timely use thouroand• of bomber have been oermanrntly cared. i •I sled to.end ten hitt).. .d sy raga to any of your readers .h ennsompti-en if tl.ry will send re Exploit std P. 0 ultimo' Reaper. fell y, DX T A at.toev ly 104 W. Adelaide s$ Tomtit. ■lased'. Homeless cone ''aids. ei John Sample, Morrie, who e right arm and hand so badly been the cylinder r.f a threshing machin time ago, near Chatham, is able about awaits, although it will be Sivas before he will hays the free his arm. Pts Press Me.. There i• me better meed► 1c e)•ilidelve, and .imil.r tr Hnrysrd'. Yellow Oil. It also 'Ratiees, lsmbegrt sere throe • and Dain generally. Tallow Med internally and erldifflitall7. There is •n fire lits sr iv • hatred, no sears MI6 filly, i re t like greed. it is eels to w Trooree Peedses, ma they ant osihs en the abed ds she Mier* the Ails. Mmeeers saeemsme ams. elisibfls What weft has Pts.Ygags heti? tet '+that is ss lust w filth it ha Who stele mg MOON rMW Net, t1i est the _: y.: its the Oen. Mos rssnsys -s hi soh ninth ss hs deism geed to lb* tisateves 111112msag r elheIMI ask